Monday, March 23, 2009

Going to be a Wild October

Set to release on October 16th of this year, Where the Wild Things Are, a childrens book come-to-life, is being brought to audiences by director Spike Jonze. The much anticipated film, is just finishing the post-production stages before the big marketing blitz starts to hit theaters, television sets, and anywhere you can slap a poster.

Spike Jonze, who is not shy to projects such as these, directing such odd films as Being John Malkovich and Adaptation, did not find this creative process so easy. Without the brilliant writing of Charlie Kaufman inspiring Jonze, he and writer David Eggers decided to tackle this project on their own. Jonze faced much criticsm from the execs at Warner Bros. who were not aligning with his image for this film. It was rumoured back in Feb 2008 that they were considering pulling the plug, and having a new director step in. Producer Gary Goetzman responded, "We support Spike's vision. We're helping him make the vision he wants to make".

Its hard not to have faith in the guy, who has brought such great stories to life. Only time will tell, and for any those who loved the book as a child, you can be the judge in October.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Public Enemy #1



John Dillinger hits the big screen this spring, and he is being represented by none other than Johnny Depp. Michael Mann has casted Depp as his leading gangster, with Christian Bale co-starring as Officer Melvin Purvis. Dillinger, a notorious bank robber of the 1920s and 30s, inspired many criminal minds alike during that time, and was one of the hardest criminals of his time to catch. Even when he was caught he was able to escape.

The film though is based Bryan Burrough's non-fiction book, Public Enemies: America's Greatest Crime Wave and the Birth of the FBI, 1933–34. He originally pitched the idea as a miniseries to HBO and was made an executive producer, along with Robert De Niro's Tribeca Films. Burrough was also asked to write the screenplay. However, he felt more comfortable writing it as a non-fiction book and spent two years working on it while the interest in the miniseries disappeared. Eventually HBO gave up on the miniseries and the rights were re-sold to production companies representing Michael Mann and Leonardo DiCaprio who was interested in playing John Dillinger. Burrough's met with all involved but then heard nothing for almost three years. DiCaprio eventually left the project to appear in a Martin Scorsese film.

In 2007 Michael Mann showed interest in the project once again, and eventually got Depp and Bale to sign on to the project. He also brought friend and writer Ronan Bennett into the picture to help write the screenplay. Burrough has read the film's screenplay and said, "it’s not 100 percent historically accurate. But it’s by far the closest thing to fact Hollywood has attempted, and for that I am both excited and quietly relieved".

The film debuts in North America on July 2nd, and looks nothing short of entertaining. Check it out...